What Is A Logarithm?: This Number Is Called The Base
What Is A Logarithm?: This Number Is Called The Base
• In your classes you will really only encounter logs for two bases, 10 and e.
Log base 10
We write “log base ten” as “log10” or just “log” for short and we define it like
this:
More examples:
log 100 = 2
log (105)= 5
• The point starts to emerge that logs are really shorthand for exponents.
• Why e?
In 1864 Benjamin Peirce would write i"i = e # and say to his students:
“We have not the slightest idea what this equation means, but we may be sure
that it means something very important.”
! u
de du
• e has the simplest derivative: = eu
dx dx
The derivative of e with a variable exponent is equal to e with that exponent times
the derivative of that exponent.
• We care because nature does not usually go by logs, but instead by natural logs.
If y = ex then ln (y) = x
And so,
ln(ex) = x eln(x) = x
ln(e45) = 45
log(1023 x 1045) = 68
(256/x) = 101.5
x = 256/101.5
x = 8.10
ln(K) = ln(b-a/rT)
ln(K/b) = -a/rT
-(rT)ln(K/b) = a or a = (rT)ln(b/K)
&I #
• Solve ln $ o ! = kt for If
$I !
% f "
To get If out of the ln, put both sides as an exponent of e:
& I o # kt
$ ! =e
$I !
% f "
& I f # -kt
$$ !! =e
% Io "
If = Io e-kt
Logarithms
Often when examining our data we find that our plots fall along an exponential fit,
which is much more complicated than a linear function. The use of logarithms is often
applied in this case to linearize exponential functions.
Figure 2. A very unhelpful plot of the frequency of some events over time.
For our purposes it doesn’t much matter what the two functions are, but we can see
that if we graph both A and B on the same plot, we see that we have almost no idea
what’s happening below ~15 days on the x-axis and we almost can’t see the plot of A
because the scale of B is so much greater.
Now, take the same two functions, but this time plot the log (base 10 in this case) of
each function:
Already it is easier to compare the two and we gain more insight as to the properties of
the function at both high and low ranges. Notice also that the function has become
linear.
While this plot is not so informative, see what appears if we plot the logarithm (again,
base 10 in this case):
Now we can see that there are TWO distinct processes occurring here and that there is
a unique event at day 21.